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Public Health in Our Town

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PROPOSED PEAK POWER PLANT, CHELSEA MA. Environmental Example: Chelsea ... Ludlow food handler who died from hepatitis. Indoor air quality at Peabody High ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Public Health in Our Town


1
Public Health in Our Town
  • Urgent Needs
  • Shrinking Resources

2
Public Health in the News Everyday
Third Man confirmed dead from Whittier Farms Milk
contamination
S. Boston house of squalor condemned City gives
owners 30 days to clean
SENATE PASSES TRANS FAT BILL
3
Public Health Protection and Prevention
  • Doctors treat individuals Public health
    professionals prevent disease for whole
    communities
  • West Nile, hepatitis, listeria, AIDS, etc
  • Public health officials protect and inspect our
    food establishments, keep our indoor air quality
    safe, well and beach water safe, sewage and
    septic systems installed correctly
  • Emergency preparedness/health responders
  • During extreme weather events, chemical,
    biological, radioactive attacks or accidents
  • Coordinate and administer mass vaccines, antidotes

4
Public HealthPublic Protection
  • Protect our families from communicable diseases
  • Ensure safe drinking water private wells and
    groundwater
  • Responsible for proper sewage and septic
    installation
  • License and inspect food distribution
  • local farms, restaurants, supermarkets, senior
    centers
  • Investigate consumer complaints
  • housing, garbage, food, illegal dumping
  • Ensure water quality in beaches and pools
  • Ensure safe and sanitary summer camps, motels and
    campgrounds
  • Safe operation of landfills housing inspections
  • Coordinating Emergency response public health
    aspects chemical exposures

5
Public Health Nurses
  • Prevent, monitor and control communicable
    infectious diseases (meningitis, flu, hepatitis)
  • Work with day care centers, nursing homes,
    medical offices, school nurses and municipal and
    state authorities to prevent and control
    outbreaks
  • Document and report trends West Nile, SARS,
    whooping cough, chicken pox, measles
  • Reach vulnerable, high risk populations including
    children and the elderly

6
Restaurant and Food Safety
  • Restaurant inspections proper food preparation
    and storage, food temperatures, pest control,
    hand washing, clean bathrooms
  • Legal requirement to inspect all food
    establishments between 2 and 4 times per year
  • Milk and dairy inspections
  • Chemical and microbial contaminants
  • Other food handling wholesale distributors,
    bakeries, summer camp kitchens

7
MA General Law Title 5 Septic Responsibilities
and Liabilities
  • Todays septic plans and installations are much
    more complex than they were in earlier eras
  • More training and computer skills are now
    required to review and approve plans
  • Fallout of an improperly installed or inspected
    septic system is polluted groundwater and
    drinking water
  • Presents a huge liability for towns
  • DEP budget cuts over the last 2 years mean the
    entire municipal protection system has minimal
    support/oversight for septic issues

8
A New Mandate Post 9-11 Emergency
Preparedness
  • Officials have adopted an all hazards approach
    to prepare for chemical, biological, radiological
    incidents
  • Public health and Public safety agencies all work
    together EMTs, Police, Fire and Medical
    personnel all receive training on same equipment
  • Coordinate local emergency plans shelter,
    telephone call in lines, mass immunizations

9
Emergency PreparednessLocalized responses and
solutions
  • Plymouth and Franklin counties and northeastern
    MA are close to nuclear reactors
  • -potassium iodine tablet distribution
  • Berkshire County-
  • -coordinates efforts in many towns with limited
    resources
  • Cambridge
  • - coordinates 27 cities and towns with training
    and drills
  • Boston
  • - the largest city and port in NE a potential
    target

10
A variety of new mandates arrive annually
  • Beaver removal permits
  • Sharps Collection and Disposal
  • Mercury risks and safe disposal
  • Body arts, tanning salon
  • inspections

11
PROPOSED PEAK POWER PLANT, CHELSEA MA
12
Environmental Example Chelsea
  • Issue a new peak energy facility plant proposed
  • In May of 2007 examined pediatric asthma
    prevalence from four elementary schools (complex
    of 1,800 students) located ΒΌ mile from the
    proposed site
  • 3 out of 4 schools at the complex had pediatric
    asthma rates statistically significantly higher
    than the statewide rate
  • MDPH/BEH evaluated proponents estimate of impacts
    on community for facility related emissions and
    recommended a number of additional analyses to
    better characterize potential impact
  • MDPH/BEH also recommended that various mitigation
    efforts to reduce the proposed impacts should be
    considered once the more refined impact estimates
    were created
  • In Nov 2007, the proponent withdrew proposed
    facility at this location

13
Ever Increasing MandatesFlat Lined Staffing
Levels
  • Many municipalities are seeing over 100
    increases in septic plan reviews
  • Number of food establishments has exploded in
    last 5 years
  • Many municipalities operate with volunteer Boards
    who do inspections on their own time
  • Housing violations are very time consuming.
    Extreme hoarding, a mental illness, creates
    gruesome dangers for neighbors and emergency
    responders and is on the rise
  • Emergency preparedness the straw that broke the
    camels back must coordinate drills with other
    agencies and towns
  • Board members so busy doing inspections they
    cant focus on policy making such as requiring
    well testing, disease reporting

14
State Auditor Joe DeNuccis Report On DPH Food
Protection Program An Increasing Risk
  • Highly decentralized system of food inspections
    is very inefficient and must be modernized.
  • Must add sufficient state and local staff to
    oversee and conduct the required inspections.
    This is an essential step toward improving food
    safety in Massachusetts.
  • 11 of 13 local authorities visited were not in
    compliance with federal and state standards that
    call for inspections at least every six months
    for most food establishments, and three to four
    times a year for high-risk establishments, such
    as large restaurants, hospitals and nursing
    homes. March 2007

15
FURTHER AUDIT FINDINGS
  • Local health authority food inspection activities
    are significantly understaffed in most
    municipalities.
  • In many instances, staffing levels are at least a
    third less than the federally-recommended levels.
  • Only 8 percent of inspectors meet the preferred
    Certified Food Safety Professional qualifications
    standard
  • The state programs inspections of wholesale
    firms were also found to be inadequate, as more
    than 2,000 of these businesses were inspected an
    average of only once every four years.

16
Public health and town budgets
  • While responsibilities and mandates have
    increased local and state public health budgets
    are holding flat or decreasing
  • Budgets are being cut an average of 10 across
    the board
  • Resources are already below what is needed to be
    to keep up with current mandates
  • Cant keep up with inspections that help prevent
    disease and stem financial and other
    consequences these are liabilities waiting to
    happen
  • US FDA guidelines state that each inspector can
    only perform 250 food inspections per year
    (thats 125 establishments X 2)
  • What if a town has more than 125 establishments?
  • Resources and needs vary pool inspections take 3
    hours a water park can take 2 days

17
Public Health Budget
  • Local Public Health budget statistics
  • MA State Budget devoted to Health Care and Public
    Health

18
Municipal Liability
  • Towns are left open to potentially catastrophic
    liabilities if they are not able to keep up with
    mandatory inspections
  • EXAMPLES Need the facts on these cases
  • Ludlow food handler who died from hepatitis
  • Indoor air quality at Peabody High
  • Hepatitis A in Arlington
  • Restaurants, county fairs, camps all pose
    potential hazards
  • The costs of dealing with an outbreak to a
    community are far greater than the costs of
    surveillance to prevent one

19
Public Health Smart Investment
  • Prevents outbreaks of disease, food poisoning,
    cancers, other diseases and deaths
  • Reduces liability for cities and towns
  • Increases life span by promoting healthy
    behaviors
  • Identifies trends early to develop response and
    controls
  • Efficient public health assessment and response
    in emergencies

20
  • Every day we deal with bacteria,
    viruses, environmental contamination, molds,
    vermin, and drinking water hazards.
  • And we do it with a smile.
  • Unsafe housing, tattoo artists,
    flu pandemic preparedness, illegal dumping, and
    rabid animal response. Its all in a days work.
  • We work to keep our community safe from
    disease and health hazards. The more resources
    we have, the better equipped we are to protect
    everyones quality of life.
  • Public health is often taken for granted an
    essential service like public safety that merits
    strong support.
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